Viking Identities: Scandinavian Jewellery in EnglandViking Identities is the first detailed archaeological study of Viking-Age Scandinavian-style female dress items from England. Based on primary archival and archaeological research, including the analysis of hundreds of recent metal-detector finds, it presents evidence for over 500 brooches and pendants worn by women in the late ninth and tenth centuries. Jane F. Kershaw argues that these finds add an entirely new dimension to the limited existing archaeological evidence for Scandinavian activity in the British Isles and make possible a substantial reassessment of the Viking settlements. Kershaw offers an interpretation of the significance of the jewellery in a broader, historical context. The jewellery highlights locations of settlement not commonly associated with the Vikings. In contrast to claims of high levels of cultural assimilation, the jewellery suggests that incoming groups maintained a distinct Scandinavian identity which was sometimes appropriated by the indigenous population. Kershaw also addresses one of the great unanswered questions in the study of Viking-Age settlements: what about the women? The interpretation of the jewellery challenges traditional perceptions of Viking conquest as an all-male affair and brings into focus a population group which has, until now, been almost invisible. Kershaw describes the objects and explores a number of themes related to their contemporary use, including their date, distribution, and function in costume. This body of material - unknown 30 years ago - is introduced to a public audience for the first time. Including many object images and maps, the study provides a practical guide to the identification of Scandinavian metalwork. |
Contents
approaches and sources | 1 |
2 Identifying Scandinavian and AngloScandinavian jewellery | 20 |
origins styles and parallels | 42 |
4 The production and lifespan of Scandinavianstyle jewellery | 129 |
5 Brooch use culture and gender | 157 |
the distribution of Scandinavianstyle jewellery in England | 179 |
constructing cultural identities | 215 |
Scandinavian finds lists | 251 |
XRF analysis of Scandinavian and AngloScandinavian brooches | 256 |
AngloSaxon and Continental brooches from Norfolk Suffolk and Lincolnshire | 263 |
| 281 | |
| 301 | |
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Common terms and phrases
Anglo Anglo-Saxon brooches Anglo-Saxon Lincs Anglo-Saxon Norfolk Anglo-Saxon Suffolk Anglo-Scandinavian brooches Anglo-Scandinavian products animal appear archaeological areas artefacts attachment loop Birka Borre style Borre-style disc brooches brooch forms brooch PAS Find-ID brooch types brooches and pendants brooches found brooches from England brooches in England Cambridgeshire catchplate context County cultural Danelaw decoration Denmark detectorists disc brooch distribution dress items East Anglian Series eastern England England equal-armed brooches evidence finds found in England Graham-Campbell Hedeby Hindringham instance insular interlace Jansson Jellinge Jellinge-style disc brooch Lake Tissø late ninth Lead disc brooch lead-alloy Lincolnshire lozenge brooches Maixner metal detecting metalwork motif navian Norway openwork ornament oval brooches pin-fittings pin-lug Portable Antiquities Scheme Quadruped brooch Norfolk region Ringerike Scandi Scandinavian and Anglo-Scandinavian Scandinavian brooches Scandinavian dress Scandinavian jewellery Scandinavian settlement Scandinavian-style jewellery Schleswig-Holstein Skåne small number stylistic Suffolk suggest Sweden tenth century Terslev trefoil brooches Uppåkra worn Yorkshire


